I can't evolve Why not? It's about size... it's about space.... it's about time I
I can't evolve
Why not? It's about size... it's about space.... it's about time I
Morphy, you quoted me saying: “There's a million species in the world. So even if significant evolution took 100,000 years within a single species,”
And then you in mid sentence, you interrupted and Morphy declared: “False thesis.”
Okaaay.
And your reason was: “See above.” Which I think referred to your immediately preceding comment that: “The bigger the organism the slower the evolution.”
But surely there is some time frame in which evolution claims that larger organisms experience significant evolution. Human beings are larger than (what? I’m guessing) 99% of non-tree species. And yet, we supposedly evolved from Australopithecus to sapiens in just a few million years. A few percent genetic variation equals millions of base pair changes (the known genetic variation from primate has grown since a decade ago). So, the apostles of evolution have this massive tension that they seem to ignore, that evolution happens s-o s-l-o-w-l-y that we can’t see it (especially for big species like us), yet in only a few million years, millions of genetic changes occurred, with the vast majority of them propagated through virtually the entire population. So, significant evolution cannot happen slower that the 100,000 years I graciously allotted it, even for a relatively huge species like us. And thus, since we’re monitoring a million species a year, we should see frequent examples of significant evolution, across the kingdoms.
I think I’ve sufficiently refuted your claim that we cannot see evolution happening annually anywhere but in microorganisms because of the size of the other organisms, I’ll now address your other, even less tenable excuse.
Morphy: “We would [see annual examples of significant evolution throughout nature] but there is one problem: there are plenty of living organisms today and it is very difficult to find new food or shelter. When a major disaster happens (like 65 millions years ago) and 80-90% species will die out you will see HUGE eruption of new species. Evolution always thrives after massive catastrophes since it leaves vast areas to inhabit (Latin: natura horret vacuum )”
I know you’ve flown in airplanes. Have you observed the terrain beneath you? Have you ever flown over the Atlantic? The Pacific? Butterflies in the Amazon are not prevented from enjoying the glory of evolving new capabilities, let’s say, chameleon camouflage, just because there are too many lizards out to get them. And I thought that mankind was destroying the ecosystem at an unprecedented rate. Gone are the buffalo, the dodo birds, the condor, deforestation, and the loss of over a thousand species a day. Gee, you’d think mother nature would be begging for mutated offspring to jumpstart the next diversification wave.
Size isn’t the reason we don’t see many significant examples of evolution every year among plants and animals, since huge humans supposedly evolved very rapidly over just the last few million years (and we’re only one species among a million). And lack of opportunity is not the reason those millions of species don’t evolve new abilities (as though overcrowding discourages the mushrooms in a meadow in Yellowstone from developing a new method of seed distribution). Morphy, these are not scientific explanations. Have you ever rigorously challenged these excuses you’ve heard? Because now, you repeat them without ever having attempted to falsify them, and that is not science, but public relations spin.
Morphy, I have NOT done justice to your posts, because I don’t have the time to deal with all your interesting points. But I’ll address this next one, which you’ve confused. Perhaps it’s because English is not your first language (although your mastery of it is better than many in Colorado
), but you misunderstood my point, turning it backwards. I did not mistakenly think that our immune system adjusts to varying threats by mutation. Rather, our system is designed to meet and adjust to varying threats, even ones never before seen. I am arguing that in various cases, pathogens seem to behave the same way, responding not by chance fortuitous mutation, but in a pre-programmed way to meet a new threat to its own existence.
So you wrote, “False again. Immunologic system can destroy new pathogens NOT because of spontanic mutations. It can because it is programmed to destroy every cell which doesn't have right peptides (a specific 'ID') exposed on a cell membrane. It has nothing to do with mutations.”
So my point still stands, unrefuted:
Bob Enyart said:
But back to bacteria, when they consistently gain rapid resistance (especially in similar ways in separate populations), that is evidence not of random chance over a thousand generations, but of preprogrammed response to a threat, similar to how our immune system is programmed to adapt to never-before-seen pathogens.
Morphy, if I use a wrong term, etc., I’d be thrilled if you corrected the term, but then still considered the argument. I’m not a scientist, nor a doctor, but just the pastor of a Bible church.
Thanks,
-Bob Enyart